34 pointsby GeekyBeara day ago7 comments
  • twelvechessa day ago
    Data privacy is going to become a luxury. This is why the mission of teams like DuckDuckGo, GrapheneOS and more, is so important
  • 14 hours ago
    undefined
  • rolph20 hours ago
    next in: trolling by google search.

    A.K.A. salting your search history with invidious gems.

    e.g. google "how to sneak into PD breakroom and put laxative on all the donuts" , and many more

    • bdangubic15 hours ago
      there are for sure a ton of browser extensions that will do this
  • sharemywina day ago
    so by that logic is transaction data allowed without a warrant?
  • Safe against unreasonable search and seizure... unless literally any corporate entity sees you.
  • kittikittia day ago
    The first thing I do when installing a new browser is to change the default search engine. I recommend Ecosia and DuckDuckGo but Brave Search for the most private options.
    • fsflovera day ago
      Why do you think Brave Search is more private?
      • kittikitti16 hours ago
        Because they serve their own independent search index. Others, under the hood, just use Bing or Google API for searches. This could mean that searching on other engines queries the sites that enable abuse described in the original article. Other sites that operate their own index include Yandex but because it's headquartered in Moscow, Russia, I have doubts about their privacy. This is what leads me to conclude that Brave Search has the best general privacy. I'm not entirely convinced by DuckDuckGo because it could just be a honeypot since it's approved by Big Tech gatekeepers.
        • bdangubic15 hours ago
          brave is about as private as a public library :)
      • zdp721 hours ago
        Because they promise to not be evil. Oh, wait that was someone else.
  • overtone1000a day ago
    A better headline would be, "Google helped the suspect find their victim and then helped the police find their suspect"
    • GeekyBear21 hours ago
      How about, "Hording your users personal data in order to make ad sales more profitable is now more risky for those users than ever?"
      • bigyabai42 minutes ago
        The US government most certainly does not stop at collecting ad data.